Separation. The First 48 Hours. What Not To Do.
The first 48 hours after separation are high risk.
Not because you are irrational. Not because you are weak.But because shock compresses time and distorts urgency.
In this window, people often:
• leave the family home impulsively
• agree to “temporary” parenting or financial arrangements
• send long emotional messages
• move or transfer money
• make announcements that escalate conflict
Most long-term regret does not come from what people did months later.It comes from what they did too quickly at the beginning.
This practical Australian Resource Kit shows you exactly what to avoid in the first 48 hours so you do not create problems that are difficult to unwind.
It gives you:
• the core rule for early separation
• the six most common high cost mistakes
• simple scripts to slow pressure without escalating conflict
• a containment checklist to protect your position
• clarity on when to move beyond this stabilisation phase
This is not about solving separation. It is about preventing avoidable damage while shock settles.
Why Buy This Resource Kit?
Because the first 48 hours often determine the tone and structure of everything that follows.
Early agreements become expectations.Early messages become records. Early departures become new norms.
Doing less in the beginning often preserves more later.
If you want to stabilise before making structural decisions and protect your position while emotions are high this guide is for you.
Stability first. Decisions later.
